I wonder why Trump is even with Clinton in Pennsylvania and Ohio ...
Why does Trump resonate with voters. If Obama was indeed 'helping' the poor ... why is it the poor / economically segregated in these states - why are they supporting Trump.
When resources are geared toward Black and Illegal, and poor whites have a harder time accessing resources ... why not support anyone who offers help. These groups have been ignored by the Democrats and used by Republicans.
Why does Trump resonate with voters. If Obama was indeed 'helping' the poor ... why is it the poor / economically segregated in these states - why are they supporting Trump.
When resources are geared toward Black and Illegal, and poor whites have a harder time accessing resources ... why not support anyone who offers help. These groups have been ignored by the Democrats and used by Republicans.
Researchers
comparing poverty rates in adjacent school districts expected to find the
largest disparities in the South, but only one Southern state made the top 10
list.
By
Rowena Lindsay, Staff August 23, 2016
School systems in Detroit and its
neighbor, Grosse Pointe, Mich., are the most economically disparate adjacent
school districts in the country, according to a new report from EdBuild, an educational
funding reform nonprofit.
Looking at every school district in
the country, compared with the other districts it borders, "Fault Lines:
America's Most Segregating School District Borders," shows that while 49.2
percent of Detroit's school-age residents live in poverty, only 6.5 percent of
their peers in neighboring Grosse Pointe live below the poverty line.
The problem goes beyond segregation
itself: given American schools' reliance on local property taxes for funding,
such disparate incomes are reflected in disparate opportunities for children in
nearby districts.
"The schools in these districts
face tremendous impediments to teaching and learning, and yet because of
district borders, low-income students are further deprived of the benefits from
the financial and cultural capital of better-off peers that they would
encounter in an integrated school," the report says.
"Fault Lines" illustrates
"how school finance systems have led to school segregation along class
lines within communities around the country, and how judicial and legislative
actions have actually served to strengthen these borders that divide our
children and our communities," EdBuild's founder and chief executive,
Rebecca Sibilia, told The Detroit News in an email.
The research team looked at all
33,500 borders throughout the country, comparing the poverty rates of
school-aged children in neighboring districts. They expected to
find the greatest disparity between schools in the South, Ms. Sibelia told NPR,
only to find that just one Southern city made it into the 'Top 10'
worst-segregated borders: Birmingham, Ala.
In Southern states, Sibelia said,
county lines often double as school district lines, creating "less
opportunity for intentional segregation." Instead, the researchers
found the greatest disparity tended to occur
in the country’s manufacturing centers: Michigan, Wisconsin,
Indiana, Illinois, Ohio, and Pennsylvania.
In the study, the term
"segregation" is referring to class separation, not race. The two
often overlap, however, creating what some allege is a legal way to essentially
continue racial segregation in
schools, decades after the Supreme Court case Brown v. Board of Education
declared it unconstitutional.
Detroit’s population is 82.7 percent
African-American, according to 2010 census data, while the five towns in the
Grosse Pointe district range just under 2 percent to about 13 percent
African-American – with one notable outlier, Harper Woods, at about 45 percent.
In 1974, the Supreme Court
case Milliken v. Bradley blocked proposals to bus students between
districts in hope of achieving more racially integrated schools, ruling that
the districts were not responsible for the segregation unless it could be
proven to be intentional.
"The court said that the school
district as a concept is basically untouchable," Ben Justice, an education
historian at Rutgers University's Graduate School of Education, told NPR. "To argue
that where people live, particularly by the 1960s, was not the result of racist
government policy was simply a lie. Public policy and private industry
conspired to create neighborhoods where people could or could not live."
Grosse Pointe Superintendent Gary
Niehaus told The Detroit News that the district is working to promote diversity
after a video of a racist incident at one of the district's schools went viral.
"Our student body asked for
town hall meetings after the second incident and from those conversations, we
engaged the University of Michigan and we sent five students from both Grosse
Pointe North and South to a summer leadership camp on diversity," Mr.
Niehaus told The Detroit News. "It's a year-long program."
This approach may address the racial
and classist climate within individual schools, however, it does not address
the systemic problem of inequality in school districting and funding.
"We have five decades of
research at this point that show that it's a huge advantage for low-income
students to attend mixed-income schools and that middle-class students in those
schools have high academic performance throughout and their scores aren't
harmed," Halley Potter, a fellow at The Century Foundation and co-author
of a report on the subject, told The Christian Science Monitor in
June.